a genuine pause of happiness inside the larger wait. Enjoy it fully — and don't mistake the rest stop for the destination. Full love reading
Meat and Drink
Hexagram 5 · Line 5 meaning
"Waiting with meat and wine. Steadfastness brings good fortune."
Hsü is the hexagram of nourishment through waiting. Clouds gather — the rain will come, but it cannot be hurried. Danger lies ahead (water above), yet strength stands below (heaven within): the situation calls not for retreat and not for a charge, but for confident, patient readiness.
Hexagram 5 line 5 means a pause of calm and refreshment arrives in the midst of the larger difficulty. Savour it without guilt — it's given to strengthen you for what lies ahead. But don't let the respite dull your vigilance or persuade you the work is finished. Use it to fortify your resolve, and hold your discipline through the quiet as firmly as through the storm.
The fifth line is the ruler's place, and even in a hexagram of waiting it brings a kind of mastery: the ease of meat and wine, a genuine interval of plenty inside the long wait. This is not indulgence — it's provision, the nourishment the image of the whole hexagram keeps returning to ("we eat and drink, remain joyous and of good cheer"). The steadfastness clause is the hinge. A respite can strengthen or soften, depending entirely on what you do with it. Taken as fuel, it restores the certainty that waiting well requires. Mistaken for the destination, it lets the discipline slacken exactly when the difficulty isn't over.
Do accept the good interval fully — rest, enjoy it, let it replenish you, and drop any guilt about pausing in the middle of a hard passage. This is what the strength is for. But keep one eye clear: don't let the comfort talk you into believing you've arrived, and don't spend the resolve the pause was meant to build. Fortify yourself in the calm — deepen your steadiness rather than loosening it — so that when the wait resumes you meet it restored, not caught off guard. Savour the meat and wine, and keep your discipline set for the road still ahead.
The change toward Hexagram 11
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 11, Peace — heaven and earth mingling, spring in the world and the heart, the time when influences flow and tensions dissolve. The link is the refreshment of this line: the pause is a real taste of Peace, harmony genuinely arriving. Enjoy it as the true thing it is. But Peace has its own physics — the great arrives and stays only while the inner balance holds — so let the calm strengthen your steadiness rather than dissolve it. Savour the peace, keep the balance that sustains it, and the good season lasts.
a welcome lull or small win mid-effort. Take the refreshment, then hold your discipline; the project isn't finished yet. Full career reading
a calm window has opened. Use it to steady yourself and think clearly — but don't assume the calm means the matter's resolved. Full timing reading
Am I using this calm to refuel, or to quietly let my discipline slide?
What would restored certainty, rather than mere rest, feel like here?
Keep the line inside the full reading
A changing line becomes useful when you read it in the right order and keep it tied to the wider hexagram pattern.
Read the parent hexagram first so Line 5 stays anchored in the actual situation rather than floating as a detached slogan.
Let this line show where the pressure, correction, or opening is most active right now. It is usually the sharpest instruction in the cast.
Only after that should you compare the transformed figure and decide what movement this changing line is pointing toward.
If you want the wider method behind this sequence, read how to consult the I Ching or go deeper with the changing-lines guide.
Read the full line sequence
Waiting in the Meadow
"Waiting in the open meadow. It helps to stay with what endures. No blame."
Hexagram 5 line 1 means the difficulty is still distant and ordinary life carries on. Don't waste this open time conjuring the challenge before it arrives or reorganising everything around what might come. Prepare by staying with what's regular and essential — steady habits, steady principles. Trust your inner strength and stay open to the unexpected without anticipating it.
Waiting on the Sand
"Waiting on the sand by the riverbank. There is some gossip. The end brings good fortune."
Hexagram 5 line 2 means the challenge is nearer now and unrest begins — criticism, blame, talk. Uncertainty tempts you to defend yourself or doubt your course; neither is needed. Stay grounded in what you know to be true, let events unfold without grasping at control, and refuse to be swayed by opinion. Answered with calm rather than argument, the gossip exhausts itself and the matter ends well.
Waiting in the Mud
"Waiting in the mud invites the enemy's arrival."
Hexagram 5 line 3 means your waiting has degenerated into carelessness — wading toward the difficulty before it's ripe, or wallowing in negative thoughts and self-indulgence. Either way you're stuck and exposed, and your own attitude is summoning the very trouble you fear. This isn't a verdict of ruin; it's a warning. Recover a steady, correct mindset now, and the danger passes without harm.
Waiting in Blood
"Waiting in blood. Get out of the pit."
Hexagram 5 line 4 means the situation has turned grave — wounds have been taken, and the pull is toward vengefulness, a sense of being wronged by fate, a readiness to strike back. That mindset is the pit. The counsel is stark: get out of it. No force will help here. Retreat from the destructive emotion, stand fast without struggling, and let composure carry you through.
Meat and Drink
"Waiting with meat and wine. Steadfastness brings good fortune."
Hexagram 5 line 5 means a pause of calm and refreshment arrives in the midst of the larger difficulty. Savour it without guilt — it's given to strengthen you for what lies ahead. But don't let the respite dull your vigilance or persuade you the work is finished. Use it to fortify your resolve, and hold your discipline through the quiet as firmly as through the storm.
Three Uninvited Guests
"One falls into the pit. Three uninvited guests arrive. Honour them, and the end brings good fortune."
Hexagram 5 line 6 means the collapse you were waiting to avoid seems to have come — and despair beckons. Precisely here the unexpected arrives: help, perspectives, or turns of events you didn't invite and may not initially welcome. Honour them. What appears in a strange form at the worst moment may be the rescue itself. Open-mindedness at the point of defeat is what transforms it.
Read this hexagram in context
The connection needs time to ripen — wait with confidence, not anxiety.
The opening isn't ripe yet — wait ready, not anxious.
The timing isn't ripe — wait with strength and readiness, not anxiety.
The home needs patience — wait well-fed and cheerful, not anxious.
Hold your position with confidence — the right entry hasn't ripened yet.
Wait with strength — nourish yourself while your character ripens.
Understanding needs time to ripen — study steadily, don't cram it.
The work needs to ripen — wait well, keep the well full.
Wait with confidence and full strength — the moment isn't ripe yet.
The fruit of practice can't be rushed — wait, nourished and certain.
A friendship needs time to ripen — wait warmly, not anxiously.
The change isn't ripe yet — wait with confidence, keep living well.
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A quiet place to keep returning
Beyond a single reading: True Essence is a daily pause to steady the mind and return to clearer judgement — a seven-day return, free to begin, then a practice that continues day by day.
Begin the 7-day return →Consult the I Ching with Hexagram 5 in mind
If Line 5 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.